INDEX. 



Dung, use of, in converting other substances into ma- 

 nure, ----- 225, 226, 

 Essays on, by Arator, noticed— advocates fresh 

 dung, ----- 227, &c. 

 Remarks on, - - - 228, 229, to 223 

 Strong instance of injurious hot-muck -farming, 235 

 overrotted dung being worthless, 29 1 

 Top dressing, and ploughed in — comparative ex- 

 periment, - - - - . 224 

 Stable dung, whether or not it be pestilential, 291 

 Preparation of it, for winter crops, - - 233 

 Fresh, how to spread and cover it, - - 315 

 Dysentery, and other diseases, rife in bad fruit years, and 



when insects and vermin plenty, - - 285 



E 



Eckhart, Peter, sows wheat in frequent succession, - 257" 



Eckroyd, James, on the use of lime, - - 37 to 42 



Stabbing hoven cattle, - - 41 



Diseases of swine, - - • 50 



Breeding in and in, - - 52 



Artificial grasses, - - 55 



Smut in wheat, - - - 56 



Eels, useful to clear out obstructed water pipes, at the end. 



England, use of lime there, - - - . 37 



Agriculture of, in certain instances, - , - 84 



Engrafting, chesnut trees recommended, - - 435 



Ergot, spured rye, a disease in that grain — appendix, 5, &c. 



Exhalation, of dung in stercoraries, not injurious ; and 



can be restrained, - - - 230 



of exposed muck, ruinous, - - 225 



F 

 Fallows, summer, with fresh dung, - - - 93, 94 



Naked, disapproved, - - - - gg 



Farmers, their prejudices condemned, - - 97 



Should live on their own, and not foreign pro- 

 ducts, - - - - - 142 

 Fences, in new clearings, - - - - 116,117 



